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Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2008 13:34:18 -0600
From: "Ruth Berman" <berma005 at umn.edu>
Subject: [Regalia] chick the cherub
Hungry Tiger Press (David Maxine) <hungrytigerpress at pacbell.net> wrote about
the John Dough/Gingerbread of A. Baldwin Sloane's play 1905 GINGERBREAD MAN
and the 1905 play-version of Denslow's THE PEARL AND THE PUMPKIN and
speculated that they and Baum at some point during the run of the stage
WIZARD might all have chatted about gingerbread (and the John Dough pun) as
possible materials.
Sounds plausible. It occurs to me that one reason Baum decided he wanted
Chick in his 1906 "John Dough" might have been that the new character made
for a sharper distinction between his treatment and theirs. Initially (known
from a 1912 letter Baum wrote to Britton, quoted in one of David Greene's
early "Bugle" articles, and again by J.L. in his "Bugle" article on "John
Dough"), Baum was writing the story thinking it would make a good serial for
"Ladies' Home Journal," but the editor thought he ought to write in a child
character, "and I either had a grouch or the big-head and refused to alter
the text." When Baum decided to take the editor's advice after all (but at
that point he seems to have been thinking of it as a full-length book, and
doesn't seem to have offered it again for serialization), Chick wound up
becoming a memorable character.
While we're mentioning gingerbreadmen, there's also Ruth Plumly Thompson's
"The Gingerbread Man," one of her 1923 clever tales in verse written as ads
for Royal Baking Powder. She went for alliteration rather than the pun
(maybe she thought the pun was a bit — er — stale by then?), and called
him Johnny Gingerbread instead.